Yes, he's drawing the fundamental boundary: between those who seek atrocity and those who seek to avoid atrocity.
Then explain this: how does flattening entire neighborhoods, bombing aid convoys, starving children, and blocking humanitarian relief constitute “seeking to avoid atrocity”? Because that’s not defense—that’s devastation. And no amount of moral framing can change the facts on the ground.
You’re not drawing a boundary between atrocity and restraint. You’re redrawing the moral map to excuse atrocity as long as it’s done by a state you support. That’s not justice. That’s tribalism.
If you really believe in a boundary between those who seek atrocity and those who avoid it, then you must judge actions—not affiliations. Because right now, your “defender” is presiding over one of the most documented humanitarian collapses in recent history. If you still think that’s the side avoiding atrocity, then the boundary you’ve drawn is not moral. It’s political. And it’s already covered in civilian blood.
Chanting "War Crimes!" does not make it so. We have a few cases of what appears to be mistreatment of captives. Any conflict on this scale results in some of that, what counts is how the government deals with it. (And note that the only reason it's even relevant is because they are granting combatant status to those who do not actually qualify. By Geneva they fall into the category of spies/saboteurs and get no protections at all.)
And the reality is that when war is fought on an urbanized territory the primary victims in that territory will be civilians. War is extremely ugly. Blame the aggressor: Tehran.
You say “chanting ‘War Crimes!’ doesn’t make it so.” But let’s be clear—it’s not chanting. It’s the conclusion of major human rights organizations, UN rapporteurs, legal scholars, and even former IDF officials. And they’re not referring to “a few cases of mistreatment.” They’re pointing to a sustained pattern: the leveling of civilian infrastructure, the starvation of an entire population, and the deliberate obstruction of humanitarian aid.
You say civilians always suffer in war. True. But international law exists because of that reality—to limit harm, to demand proportionality, to insist that civilian life is not expendable. You don’t get to bypass those laws by simply declaring the enemy unworthy of protection or by blaming “Tehran” while dropping bombs on Rafah.
Self-defense is not a license to dismantle an entire society. Civilians are not shields by default. And calling atrocity “inevitable” is not a justification—it’s an admission that you’ve accepted it.
The law doesn’t bend for vengeance. And war doesn’t excuse abandoning humanity. If you think it does, you’re not defending justice. You’re rationalizing atrocity.
Razing a neighborhood is not an automatic war crime. Look at those pictures of razed "neighborhoods" and you'll generally notice a pattern: the damage is focused on a line, not on a point. Why would you see a line of damage? Because the bomb exploded in a tunnel. Military target, valid. The fact that it's built under civilians doesn't change that.
Bombed refugee camps. I do not recall any examples of this, but I do recall cases where they dropped near a refugee camp and the camp got damaged by secondaries. Hint: very few civilian things make secondaries. Lots of military things do.
Blocked aid. The aid was being diverted, that makes it military and blocking it is permitted by Geneva. And note that despite dire claims their blocking didn't cause mass famine. But what it did do is put a severe crimp in Hamas operations because they couldn't hijack the aid and sell it for exorbitant prices--and that's where much of their operating funds were coming from.
Engineered famine. Nope, no famine except in the minds of those who want to blame Israel.
As for that 35,000.
1) Way out of date. Current claims are in the ballpark of 50k.
2) Neither the UN nor WHO is remotely credible on this. They're both just parroting Hamas.
3) I've already shown upthread where Hamas inadvertently leaked the truth a couple of times. Far more children have lost their father than their mother, and far more males have amputations than females.
Proportional. That term does not mean what you think it means. In military terms "proportional" is measured in the ratio of military advantage to civilian harm. Ratio, not absolute units. So long as the enemy poses a realistic ability to inflict any harm (and note that simply possessing a weapon capable of reaching any of your units is normally considered to meet this threshold even if not currently in range) you are free to keep killing them. There is no bag limit.
Here’s the reality—your response isn’t a defense. It’s a distortion. And it unravels the moment we stop accepting euphemism as argument.
You say “razing a neighborhood” isn’t automatically a war crime. Correct—if it meets the legal thresholds of distinction, proportionality, and precaution. But reducing entire blocks to rubble because there’s a tunnel somewhere underneath is not precision warfare. It’s collective punishment with aerial justification. The Geneva Conventions don’t say, “If there’s a military asset nearby, flatten the area.” They require that all feasible precautions be taken to avoid civilian harm. That’s not a suggestion. It’s the law.
You say refugee camps weren’t targeted—just hit by “secondaries.” But the Jabalia, Nuseirat, and Rafah strikes weren’t glancing blows. They were massive, deliberate attacks in densely populated areas. And “secondaries” don’t absolve you when you choose to strike a zone full of displaced families. Blaming the explosion on what was in the building still doesn’t answer why the building was bombed in the first place.
As for famine: The IPC has confirmed catastrophic hunger in northern Gaza. Aid trucks have been blocked, looted, and shot at. Aid workers have been killed. UN warehouses bombed. Whether or not you want to label it “famine,” the conditions—mass food insecurity, children dying of malnutrition, no access to water or medicine—are real. The legal term is starvation as a method of warfare. And yes, that’s a war crime too.
Your dismissal of the 35,000+ dead as “parroting Hamas” doesn’t hold. Every major international monitoring body—including independent groups like Amnesty, Human Rights Watch, and OCHA—has affirmed that the toll is overwhelmingly civilian. When your argument depends on erasing the credibility of everyone except the party dropping bombs, it’s not skepticism—it’s denialism.
And your definition of “proportionality” is legally and morally upside down. You don’t get to kill endlessly just because the enemy might still pose a threat. Proportionality weighs concrete and direct military advantage against expected civilian harm. And when the overwhelming consequence of your campaign is dead civilians, obliterated hospitals, flattened schools, and famine—you’ve crossed that line. No ratio, no semantics, no tunnel map can undo that.
So let’s call this what it is: not a defense of Israel. A defense of impunity—by rewriting law, shifting blame, and redefining death as strategic necessity.
And history will see through it.
You can flatten anything military, anything else too close that gets hit, too bad. "Too close" has undergone considerable revision over the decades, the area bombing of WWII doesn't happen anymore because the weapons have gotten a lot more precise. And you are likewise expected to use the minimum boom that will accomplish the mission.
You talk of razed neighborhoods--but watch some of the video of Israel hitting the tunnels. You see the direct blast effect of the bomb and you see lines of damage radiating from it. Lines where the tunnel collapsed, typically extending far beyond the area directly hit by the blast. The military objective is collapsing the tunnels, the buildings destroyed by the blast are the undesired result. Area goes at the square of radius, if the tunnels are killed farther out than the buildings this strongly suggests the best option is to drop the biggest things available (the 2000# bombs.) (What's happening here is the bombs were fused to explode underground, the tunnels propagate the blast so it no longer dissipates at the square of distance like it does in air.) (Note that there are also the buildings that failed because their foundations were compromised by the tunnel caving in. Those were doomed by anything that collapsed the tunnel and thus shouldn't be counted in either direction.)
Your response relies on technical jargon and physics to bury a simple truth: if the foreseeable consequence of your strategy is widespread civilian death and destruction, it’s not an “undesired result”—it’s a violation of international law.
Yes, weapons have become more precise. And with that precision comes greater legal responsibility, not less. You cannot claim you’re using high-precision bombs and then dismiss civilian casualties as unfortunate side effects. If a weapon is too destructive for a given environment—like a 2,000-pound bomb in a dense urban zone—then using it is not justified by the presence of a tunnel. It’s prohibited by the principles of proportionality and precaution.
You say the damage is a “line,” implying surgical accuracy. But dead civilians don’t die in straight lines. They die in homes, schools, and shelters because those lines cut through real lives. Tunnels don’t negate the requirement to avoid civilian harm. And the presence of infrastructure beneath a building doesn’t make everything above it expendable.
International humanitarian law is clear: even when a legitimate military target is present, expected civilian harm must not be excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage gained. The size of the bomb, the location, the density of the population—these all matter. And if the only way to destroy a tunnel is to destroy everything above and around it, then you’re not allowed to strike.
What you’re defending isn’t legal. It’s tactical convenience elevated above civilian life. And no amount of blast radius math changes that.
When a military knowingly uses a method that consistently produces disproportionate civilian casualties, the burden isn’t on the civilians to get out of the way. It’s on the military to change the method—or stop.
That’s not fantasy. That’s the Geneva Conventions. And ignoring them doesn’t make you a realist. It just makes you complicit.
It waddles and quacks as a country. It's being held to the standards of a country.
AI and HRW are water-carriers for the terrorists, both simply assume the underdogs are right. ICJ simply was accepting a case filed by a member country--note that no evidence was provided. And there was another filing involved that sought to redefine genocide because what's been happening in Gaza is not genocide.
Gaza is not a sovereign nation. It has no control over its borders, airspace, coastline, or even its population registry. Israel controls nearly every aspect of life in Gaza—from the fuel that powers its hospitals to the goods that cross its border. That’s not sovereignty. That’s occupation, and every major legal authority, from the UN to the Red Cross, recognizes it as such.
If you argue Gaza “acts like a country,” then you’re also bound to accept that Israel, as an actual state and military superpower in the region, must be held to the legal standards of one. That means observing international law, protecting civilians, and exercising proportionality. You can’t selectively invoke statehood just to justify massive military retaliation, then ignore the obligations that come with it.
Dismissing Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and the International Court of Justice by calling them biased is a deflection—not a rebuttal. These are respected legal and humanitarian institutions that have criticized abuses on all sides. When they issue warnings about genocide, it isn’t because they “side with underdogs.” It’s because their job is to assess law, evidence, and precedent—and that evidence is overwhelming.
The ICJ didn’t merely accept a case. It issued a formal ruling that the risk of genocide in Gaza is plausible and required Israel to prevent genocidal acts. That is not a political statement. It’s a legal judgment, based on decades of international law and obligations.
And finally, genocide doesn’t mean replicating the Holocaust. It means the targeted destruction of a group in whole or in part—through mass killing, forced displacement, destruction of infrastructure, and deliberate blocking of food and aid. That’s not being redefined. That’s the actual legal standard. And right now, leading genocide scholars and legal experts say Israel’s actions in Gaza meet that threshold.
You’re not countering the evidence—you’re denying it. And denial in the face of documented mass atrocity isn’t skepticism. It’s complicity.
You conveniently forget that the fighting long predates that. This has been going on since they failed to destroy Israel back in 1948.
No one’s forgetting the history. What you’re doing is freezing it—trapping a whole population in the sins of the past and denying them any political evolution or human distinction.
Yes, the conflict predates 2007. But that doesn’t justify turning Gaza into an open-air prison or treating every Palestinian child as if they carry the intent of 1948. The blockade, the bombings, the displacement—those are not responses to an ongoing war. They are mechanisms of domination maintained over generations.
If you’re still punishing people for a war they didn’t fight, you’re not defending a nation. You’re perpetuating a narrative where an entire population is held guilty by birthright. That’s not history—it’s weaponized memory, used to rationalize collective punishment and erase the line between militants and civilians.
The past doesn’t justify the present. It warns against repeating it.
No. The death of human shields is on the side that made them into human shields.
That’s not how the law—or morality—works.
If a militant uses civilians as shields, that’s a war crime. But if you kill those civilians anyway, knowing they’re there, that’s your war crime too. The Geneva Conventions don’t say, “It’s fine to kill civilians if the other side put them there.” They say you must take every feasible precaution to protect them—even when the enemy violates the rules first.
This isn’t just legal technicality. It’s the core of why we have laws of war in the first place: to stop one side’s barbarity from becoming everyone’s excuse.
Blaming only the side that hides among civilians while exonerating the side that bombs them anyway isn’t justice. It’s moral outsourcing. You don’t get to shrug off your own obligations because the enemy ignored theirs.
The moment you say “their war crime justifies ours,” you’ve abandoned the rule of law for the rule of vengeance—and history has never been kind to those who made that trade.
I don't like what happened in 2003 but note that Saddam was hurting his people more than we did. Where we failed abysmally is that they failed to consider what would happen after victory. The reality is that the country fell to an Iranian-backed insurgency.
And that same “after victory” failure is happening now—only worse.
If your defense of this war is that maybe the occupier kills fewer people than the regime it replaced, that’s not a justification. It’s moral relativism with a body count. And invoking Saddam’s brutality doesn’t absolve the chaos, death, and radicalization that followed the invasion. That war destabilized a region, empowered Iran, and birthed ISIS. Sound familiar?
Because that’s exactly what’s happening in Gaza. If your strategy for removing Hamas involves mass civilian death, collapsed infrastructure, and no credible plan for governance, you’re not securing peace—you’re laying the groundwork for more extremism.
So if Iraq was a failure because it toppled a regime without a future, how is Gaza any different—except that here, you’re also denying food, aid, and shelter while calling it restraint? This isn’t self-defense. It’s a second draft of a disaster, with the same excuses and none of the lessons learned.
NHC